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Post by Salem6 on Oct 11, 2003 10:35:56 GMT
All kick-off times are BST up until Saturday 25 October. From Sunday 26 October all times will be GMT.
Friday 10 October 1130: Australia 24-8 Argentina (Pool A) Sydney
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Saturday 11 October 0530: New Zealand 70-7 Italy (Pool D) Melbourne
0800: Ireland 45-17 Romania (Pool A) Gosford
1030: France 61-18 Fiji (Pool B) Brisbane 1300: South Africa 72-6 Uruguay (Pool C) Perth
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Sunday 12 October 0900: Wales 41-10 Canada (D) Melbourne 1100: Scotland 32-11 Japan (B) Townsville 1300: England 84-6 Georgia (C) Perth
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Tuesday 14 October 1030: Argentina 67-14 Namibia (A) Gosford
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Wednesday 15 October 0800: Fiji 19-18 USA (B) Brisbane 1030: Italy 36-12 Tonga (D) Canberra 1300: Samoa 60-13 Uruguay (C) Perth
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Friday 17 October 1030: New Zealand 68-6 Canada (D) Melbourne
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Saturday 18 October 0700: Australia 90-8 Romania (A) Brisbane 1000: France 51-29 Japan (B) Townsville 1300: South Africa 6-25 England (C) Perth
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Sunday 19 October 0900: Wales 27-20 Tonga (D) Canberra 1100: Ireland 64-7 Namibia (A) Sydney 1300: Georgia 9-46 Samoa (C) Perth
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Monday 20 October 1030: Scotland 39-15 USA (B) Brisbane
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Tuesday 21 October 1030: Italy 19-14 Canada (D) Canberra
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Wednesday 22 October 1130: Argentina 50-3 Romania (A) Sydney
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Thursday 23 October 1100: Fiji 41-13 Japan (B) Townsville
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Friday 24 October 0830: New Zealand 91-7 Tonga (D) Brisbane 1100: South Africa 46-19 Georgia (C) Sydney
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Saturday 25 October 0700: Australia 142-0 Namibia (A) Adelaide 0930: Italy 15-27 Wales (D) Canberra 1130: France 51-9 Scotland (B) Sydney
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Sunday 26 October 0730: Argentina 15-16 Ireland (A) Adelaide 0930: England 35-22 Samoa (C) Melbourne
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Monday 27 October 0830: Japan 26-39 USA (B) Gosford
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Tuesday 28 October 0830: Georgia 12-24 Uruguay (C) Sydney
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Wednesday 29 October 0830: Canada 24-7 Tonga (D) Wollongong
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Thursday 30 October 0900: Romania 37-7 Namibia (A) Launceston
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Friday 31 October 0830: France 41-14 USA (B) Wollongong
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Saturday 1 November 0500: Scotland 22-20 Fiji (B) Sydney 0730: South Africa 60-10 Samoa (C) Brisbane 0935: Australia 17-16 Ireland (A) Melbourne (Ireland play France in 1/4 final)
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Sunday 2 November 0730: England 111-13 Uruguay (C) Brisbane (Report below) 0935: New Zealand 53-37 Wales (D) Sydney
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Quarter-finals
Saturday 8 November 0730: New Zealand 29-9 South Africa (QF1) Melbourne 1000: Australia 33-16 Scotland (QF2) Brisbane
Sunday 9 November 0730: France 43-21 Ireland (QF3) Melbourne 1000: England 28-17 Wales (QF4) Brisbane
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Semi-finals
Saturday 15 November 0900: New Zealand 10-22 Australia (SF1) Sydney
Sunday 16 November 0900: France 7-24 England (SF2) Sydney
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Third-place play-off
Thursday 20 November 0900: New Zealand 40-13 France (Play-off) Sydney
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Final
Saturday 22 November 0900: Australia 17-20 England (Final) Sydney
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Post by Salem6 on Oct 20, 2003 11:03:18 GMT
By Jim Stokes BBC Sport in Australia It was as expected. Tough and uncompromising, with little flowing rugby at the Subiaco Oval. South Africa's defence put England under pressure all game But hey, what a game. The purists would have loved it for its competitiveness and simplicity. When a runaway locomotive hurtles into an immovable object something has to give. When the dust settled it was England who will take the high road into the quarter-finals, while South Africa are left with the likelihood of facing New Zealand in the last eight. When the South African team was announced, a number of people raised an eyebrow at the selection of Christo Bezuidenhoudt in place of Lawrence Sephaka at loose-head. Now you know why. I don't think England's scrum has come under such scrutiny for a long time. Bezuidenhoudt is not one of your usual rotund front-rowers. But with a bit of technical nous, he made life very difficult for the England front-row. And what about South Africa's boast that the England would struggle at the breakdown? They weren't joking were they? England's attempt to get clean ball from the rucks, particularly in that opening hour, was superbly thwarted by a very sharp South African back-row. Joe van Niekerk and Juan Smith proceeded to either turn over possession, or get a hand here and a foot there to prevent England's slick delivery to their backs. I somehow don't think the All Blacks will be dying to face South Africa in two weeks' time That in turn completely flummoxed Jonny Wilkinson, who despite kicking 20 points, had a poor game by his standards. Forced on many occasions onto his right foot, his tactical kicking was a bit askew, and being the ultimate professional that he is, will admit too readily that he has had better days. So has Louis Koen, his opposite number, who will have nightmares about his performance. He converted only two from six penalty attempts and had his clearance kick charged down by Lewis Moody for Will Greenwood to pounce for his 28th try for England. Had the Bulls fly-half been on form, South Africa would have had a psychological advantage at the break. Instead England were allowed out of jail as they fumbled nervously for some rhythm. They would have been very happy to be 6-6 at the interval Wilkinson finally came into his own when England mastered the tearaway Boks. Louis Koen had a nightmare with his place kicking The master craftsman then proceeded to find the corners, and nudge over two penalties and a couple of dropped goals to kill off South Africa. But the one big bonus that coach Clive Woodward will take out of the game is that their try line remained unbroken. No one epitomised England's bludgeoning defence more than teak-tough centre Mike Tindall. A series of text-book defensive plays started when he made a crunching tackle on Smith, got back to his feet and then stripped the ball away from the number eight to set up an England counter-attack. The Bath centre was not finished yet. England were having trouble with Boks infringing at the breakdown, so Tindall went to clear out the stragglers and allow Bracken to feed Wilkinson. Bang, three points. Tindall is just one example of the work rate that is now second nature to the England team, who showed the type of character that is necessary if they want to finally go the whole hog. As for South Africa, well, I somehow don't think the All Blacks will be dying to face them in Melbourne in two weeks' time. They may have lost, but will get a massive boost from the way they made England sweat for all bar 20 minutes of a hugely intense game. Result: RSA 6-25 England
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Post by Salem6 on Oct 26, 2003 13:23:37 GMT
England survived an almighty scare as they stuttered into the World Cup quarter-finals with a lacklustre display against a scintillating Samoan side in Melbourne. England 35 Tries: Back, penalty, Balshaw, Vickery Cons: Wilkinson (3) Pens: Wilkinson (2) DG: Wilkinson Samoa 22 Try: Sititi Con: Va'a Pens: Va'a (5) Samoa won the plaudits of the crowd with some superb attacking play, while England struggled with their handling, ball retention and general positioning. Even the ever-reliable Jonny Wilkinson looked out of sorts as England led by a solitary point with just 10 minutes remaining. In the end, though, their superior fitness was enough to steer them clear, with a penalty try and scores by Neil Back, Iain Balshaw and Phil Vickery, as well as 15 points from Wilkinson's boot. The victory means England play either New Zealand or, more likely, Wales in the last eight. Wilkinson's opposite number Earl Va'a, the smallest man at the World Cup at 5ft 5ins, enjoyed a great night, continually picking gaps and rarely failing with the boot. Samoa dominated the first half, playing arguably the greatest rugby in their history. They boasted almost 100% of possession in the opening 10 minutes, during which they stretched 10-0 clear. Their only try of the night came after a risky move by Tanner Vili in his own 22 saw the ball spread through backs and forwards along the length of the field. Semo Sititi touched down at the end of it. "England can take from the match that even when they were playing badly, they still won by 13 points " From Garryowen Boy. Va'a added the conversion and three penalties to keep Samoa's points tally ticking over. England temporarily escaped their disarray on the half-hour mark from a line-out just metres from the Samoan line. From it, England's pack drove forward and Back forced his way over with ball in hand. Wilkinson added the conversion and another two penalties. His innacuracy followed at the start of the second half - with his side 16-13 behind - when an attempted drop goal went awry as England struggled to gain the upper hand. It took 52 minutes for them to finally take the lead, as coach Clive Woodward revamped the front row. With Phil Vickery and Steve Thompson on the field, the English were awarded a penalty try after Samoa were found guilty of collapsing the scrum on their line. "We have to look at ourselves as we're not good enough " England captain Martin Johnson. But that lead was shortlived as Va'a nudged his side 22-20 ahead with 18 minutes left on the clock. In a nailbiting final quarter, Wilkinson finallly found his aim with a drop goal after Iain Balshaw had enjoyed a rare moment of space on the break. Balshaw stole the limelight moments later as Wilkinson fired a looping kick into the hands of the Bath paceman, who scored with ease. The game was finally killed off as a contest when Vickery slid in for England's final score as the tiredness began to show for Samoa. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- England: J Robinson; I Balshaw, S Abbott, M Tindall, B Cohen; J Wilkinson, M Dawson; J Leonard, M Regan, J White; M Johnson, B Kay; J Worsley, N Back, L Dallaglio Replacements: S Thompson, P Vickery, M Corry, L Moody, A Gomarsall, M Catt, D Luger Samoa: T Vili; L Fa'atau, T Fanolua, B Lima, S Tagicakibau; E Va'a, S So'oialo; S Sititi (capt), M Fa'asavalu, P Poulos, L Lafaiali'i, O Palepoi, J Tomuli, J Meredith, K Lealamanua Replacements: M Schwalger, S Lemalu, K Viliamu, D Tuaivi'i, D Tyrell, D Rasmussen, D Feaunati
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Post by Salem6 on Nov 2, 2003 9:52:29 GMT
England 111-13 Uruguay MATCH SUMMARY England 111 Tries: Moody, Lewsey (5), Balshaw (2), Catt (2), Gomarsall (2), Luger, Abbott, Robinson (2), Greenwood Cons: Grayson (11), Catt (2) Uruguay 13 Try: Lemoine Con: Menchaca Pen: Menchaca (2) Josh Lewsey ran in five tries as England confirmed their mastery of Pool C with a predictable, yet impressive, demolition of Uruguay. But their passage into the last eight was marred by an injury to wing Iain Balshaw, who was stretchered off in the second half with a sprained ankle. England enjoyed a comfortable warm-up for the knock-out stages as their backs ran in 17 tries in what was always going to be a mismatch. They can now look forward to a quarter-final meeting with Wales in Brisbane next Sunday, assuming their Six Nations rivals do not beat New Zealand in Sunday's other game. England had already made several assaults on the Uruguay line by the time Lewis Moody went in on the right for their first try in the third minute. But instead of throwing open the floodgates, Clive Woodward's side were initially hampered by the kind of errors that had taken the gloss off their march to victory in Pool C. Juan Menchaca cut the deficit for Uruguay with a penalty in front of the posts, and missed the chance to make it 6-7 with another kick which drifted just wide. England finally hit form with three scores in the space of four minutes, full-back Lewsey slipping a tackle to go over down the blind side and Balshaw crossing twice in quick succession. High tackle After getting in some solid defensive practice by weathering a sustained assault on their line, England scored their best try so far. A flowing move involving Balshaw and Lewsey culminated in a score for Mike Catt, and a try from Gomarsall gave England a 42-6 half-time lead, with a further Menchaca penalty the only consolation for Uruguay. The tries continued to flow after the break. Lewsey ran in his second after excellent work from Joe Worsley, and Dan Luger opened his account. Coach Clive Woodward decided to give big guns Martin Johnson and Jason Robinson some game time, but there was concern when Balshaw was stretchered off with an ice pack on his ankle after falling awkwardly in a tackle. Woodward, however, said after the game that he expected Balshaw to be fit for the quarter-final. Uruguay were rewarded for refusing to throw in the towel soon after when prop Pablo Lemoine crashed over from close range and Menchaca converted. But normal service was resumed when Stuart Abbott jinked his way through to touch down, before Lewsey completed his hat-trick as England continued to run from all over the pitch. Robinson scored twice either side of further scores from Lewsey and Gomarsall as Uruguay's resistance crumbled, before Will Greenwood marked his return from a trip home to see his pregnant wife with the most popular score of the night. Catt's second try of the night brought up a century of points before Lewsey scored his fifth to equal England's try-scoring record. Worsley blotted his copybook late on by being sent to the sinbin for a needless high tackle. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- England: J Lewsey; I Balshaw, S Abbott, M Catt, D Luger; P Grayson, A Gomarsall; P Vickery (capt), D West, J Leonard; D Grewcock, M Corry; L Dallaglio, L Moody, J Worsley. Replacements: S Thompson, J White, M Johnson, B Kay, K Bracken, W Greenwood, J Robinson. Uruguay JM Menchaca; J Pastore, D Aguirre (capt), J De Freitas, J Viana; S Aguirre, J Campomar; E Berrutti, D Lamelas, P Lemoine, J-C Bado, J-M Alvarez, N Brignoni, N Grille, R Capo. Replacements: JA Perez, R Sanchez, G Storace, J Alzueta, M Guttierrez, E Caffera, D Reyes.
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Post by Salem6 on Nov 9, 2003 19:05:48 GMT
England 28-17 Wales England: 28 Try: Greenwood Con: Wilkinson Pens: Wilkinson (6) Drop: Wilkinson Wales: 17 Tries: S Jones, Charvis, M Williams Con: Harris England booked their place in the World Cup semi-finals, but only after Wales gave them a huge scare in Brisbane on Sunday. Steve Hansen's side led 10-3 with 43 minutes gone and it was only in the second-half England finally managed to snuff out the dragon's fire. Stephen Jones, Colin Charvis and Martyn Williams claimed three tries for Wales and although Will Greenwood hit back, 23 points from the boot of Jonny Wilkinson ultimately proved the difference. While Clive Woodward's side now head to Sydney for a semi-final with France, Wales head home. But the men in red will return as heroes after also running the All Blacks close last weekend. In a furious opening quarter, Wales were inches away from an early score when Robert Sidoli was brought down by Lewis Moody on the line. "If we play like that we won't stand a chance next week" England coach Clive Woodward.England again looked out of sorts, as Steve Thompson struggled to find his men in the line-out and Wilkinson failed to find touch with the boot. Both the Newcastle captain and his Welsh counterpart Jones then missed straight-forward penalties, before England finally got on the scoreboard when Wilkinson slotted his second attempt. The score calmed England's early nerves, but still the Welsh defence held firm and, minutes later, it was Wales who were celebrating, thanks to a bizarre cross-field kick from Mike Tindall. Hoping to find lock Ben Kay, the ball was instead picked up by Welsh flyer Williams, who darted up field and fed the ball out before re-gathering to send fly-half Jones over on the left. "Another brilliant effort by Wilkinson to hide the rubbish that this England team are" From John G.Jones missed the conversion but with his team-mates playing with verve and confidence it hardly seemed to matter. England, in contrast, were sluggish with the ball in hand and looked incapable of breaking through. And again it was Wales who took the honours before the break when captain Charvis powered over from a close-range penalty after Jones spurned a kick for goal. England coach Clive Woodward made the changes at halt-time with Mike Catt replacing Dan Luger. They needed a flying start and they got it in a moment of brilliance from Jason Robinson, who tore through the Welsh midfield, beating five men and drawing the sixth to feed the ball out to Greenwood. "We're gutted but we've come a long way" Wales coach Steve Hansen.Wilkinson's conversion brought the scores level at 10-10 and two further penalties left the red shirts looking jaded. Mark Jones then spurned an almost certain try when he opted to go it alone, despite having Williams outside him. And Wilkinson made Wales further pay for that decision with his third penalty of the half - to the visible relief of the England bench. Nine points ahead, Woodward's side finally began to look more like their old selves. But then came a superb cross-field kick from replacement fly-half Ceri Sweeney that Dallaglio failed to secure and Martyn Williams touched down to keep English nerves on edge. Harris' conversion brought his side back within eight points, but England had the last word with a Wilkinson drop-goal that guaranteed an appointment with a revitalised France next weekend. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- England: J Robinson, D Luger, W Greenwood, M Tindall, B Cohen, J Wilkinson, M Dawson; J Leonard, S Thompson, P Vickery, M Johnson (capt), B Kay, L Moody, N Back, L Dallaglio. Replacements: D West, T Woodman, S Shaw, J Worsley, K Bracken, M Catt, S Abbott. Wales: G Thomas; M Jones, M Taylor, I Harris, S Williams; S Jones, G Cooper; I Thomas, R McBryde, A Jones; B Cockbain, R Sidoli; D Jones, C Charvis (capt), J Thomas. Replacements: M Davies, G Jenkins, G Llewellyn, M Williams, D Peel, C Sweeney, K Morgan.
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Post by Salem6 on Nov 16, 2003 11:13:42 GMT
England 24-7 France England booked their place in the World Cup final against Australia with a tense victory over France in appalling conditions in Sydney. MATCH SUMMARY England 24 Pens: Wilkinson (5) DGs: Wilkinson (3) France 7 Try: Betsen Con: Michalak
High winds and torrential rain effectively ended all hopes of running rugby between two of the most explosive sides in world rugby. In the end it was left to Jonny Wilkinson and Frederick Michalak to battle it out, Wilkinson steering his side into Saturday's final with all 24 of England's points - courtesy of three drop goals and five penalties. Michalak, in contrast, managed just one kick from five attempts as the pressure of an attritional semi-final took its toll. In the majority of the game's key contests, England held the upper hand, the return of Richard Hill giving them the edge in the back row, while Matt Dawson and Wilkinson enjoyed their best games of the tournament. They were also far more disciplined, while France had a sin-binning either half - Christophe Dominici and Serge Betsen the villains. Only in the line-out were the English truly outgunned as Steve Thompson's throwing was diabolical. The Six Nations champions dominated the opening 10 minutes and were duly rewarded with Wilkinson's first drop goal. Betsen scored the game's only try But just as Clive Woodward's side looked to be settling into their rhythm, Betsen scored against the run of play. England's line-out was caught out as the ball fell for the French flanker, who just managed to ground the ball despite the efforts of Hill. From there, France dominated as England were run ragged despite Dominici being sin-binned for felling Jason Robinson with his leg. England finally took the lead just before half-time following another two Wilkinson penalties and drop goal. Nervy start Both sides had been clearly affected by nerves from the outset, which were still there in abundance as the players returned for the second half. Michalak and Wilkinson - normally so reliable - were both off target with straightforward penalties, as each side tried to gain a stranglehold in the dire conditions. England finally managed to get the upper hand with 25 minutes to go when Betsen was sin-binned for a late tackle on Wilkinson. The English fly-half this time made no mistake with his spot kick. Michalak's dire night ended prematurely when he was replaced by Gerald Merceron but, for all his efforts, he failed to bring his players to life. As the clock ticked on, Wilkinson grew in confidence, adding a further two penalties and a drop goal to round off the contest. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- England: J Lewsey; J Robinson, W Greenwood, M Catt, B Cohen; J Wilkinson, M Dawson; T Woodman, S Thompson, P Vickery; M Johnson (capt), Ben Kay; R Hill, N Back, L Dallaglio. Replacements: D West, J Leonard, M Corry, L Moody, K Bracken, M Tindall, I Balshaw. France: N Brusque; A Rougerie, T Marsh, Y Jauzion, C Dominici; F Michalak, F Galthie (capt); J Crenca, R Ibanez, S Marconnet; F Pelous, J Thion; S Betsen, O Magne, I Harinordoquy. Replacements: Y Bru, O Milloud, D Auradou, C Labit, G Merceron, D Traille, C Poitrenaud.
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Post by Salem6 on Nov 26, 2003 14:10:20 GMT
Australia 17-20 England England won the Rugby World Cup with a breathtaking Jonny Wilkinson drop goal just 26 seconds from the end of a thrilling final in Sydney. Millions watched around the world as captain Martin Johnson became the first player to lead a northern hemisphere side to the world title. Wilkinson's last-gasp effort was all that separated the sides after 100 minutes of rugby and a dramatic extra-time finale. Australia battled hard and were never out of the game but ultimately fell just short, despite opening the scoring through wing Lote Tuqiri. The match represented the culmination of four impressive years of improvement from an England team that flattered to deceive in the last World Cup. Oh the delicious irony - Jonny wins it with a drop goal! Pinch me someone, I'm dreaming! Then, Johnson and his cohorts were kicked out by South Africa and were rightly criticised for lacking a 'killer spirit'. There were no such weaknesses on display on Saturday as England wrestled the cup away from an Aussie side who fought tooth and nail to become the first team to retain the trophy. The Wallabies started strongly when Tuqiri out-jumped Jason Robinson to a huge Stephen Larkham bomb with just six minutes on the clock. The score was no more than Australia deserved but three Wilkinson penalties soon silenced the strong home support. Despite the rain continuing to fall, both sides chose to keep the ball in hand and as the game progressed, so the mighty England pack began to dominate. With just 10 minutes of the first half left, Ben Kay knocked on with the line beckoning to the frustration of the visiting fans. Minutes later, England finally silenced their critics when Robinson scuttled over wide on the left after a powerful midfield burst from Lawrence Dallaglio. The men in white started the second half as they had finished the first. KEY MOMENTS
6 mins: Tuqiri's try puts Australia ahead 38 mins: Robinson scores a try after three Wilkinson penalties to put England 14-5 ahead 80 mins: The hosts haul themselves level with Flatley's last-gasp penalty 82 mins: Wilkinson's penalty gives England an extra-time advantage 97 mins: Flatley strikes again to equalise at 17-17 100 mins: Wilkinson's drop goal wins England the World Cup Johnson led from the front with a towering performance and Dallaglio and flanker Richard Hill caused numerous problems down the middle of the pitch. But just as England looked likely to pull away, two sloppy penalties allowed Elton Flatley to bring his side back within touching distance. England looked the more confident side with the ball in hand - but only just. Will Greenwood knocked on inside the Aussie 22 and Wilkinson then missed a drop goal as the match entered a tense closing quarter. Runs from the powerful Stirling Mortlock and George Smith pushed England back into their own half. And as referee Andre Watson prepared to blow for full time, Flatley slotted his third kick of the half to push the match into extra time. The players looked understandably exhausted and when Wilkinson and Flatley again swapped penalties the match looked as if it was heading into sudden death. But England were not to be denied and it was fitting that Wilkinson sealed a deserved victory as well as the most memorable result in English rugby history. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- England: J Lewsey, J Robinson, W Greenwood, M Tindall, B Cohen; J Wilkinson, M Dawson; T Woodman, S Thompson, P Vickery; M Johnson; (capt), B Kay; Richard Hill, N Back, L Dallaglio. Replacements: D West, J Leonard, M Corry, L Moody, K Bracken, M Catt, I Balshaw. Australia: M Rogers, W Sailor, S Mortlock, E Flatley, L Tuqiri; S Larkham, G Gregan (capt); B Young, B Cannon, A Baxter; J Harrison, N Sharpe; G Smith, P Waugh, D Lyons. Replacements: J Paul, M Dunning, D Giffin, M Cockbain, C Whitaker, M Giteau, J Roff.
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Post by tone on Nov 27, 2003 13:41:27 GMT
Never been so nervous about a rugby game Thought we were great throughout, just dropped to many balls when we were so close. Lineouts were also a bit dodgy, but hey, WHO CARES? We are WORLD CHAMPIONS and its great to stuff the Aussies in their own back yard and shut up the aussie press and that twat David Campese Always knew we would win LOL
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Post by Salem6 on Nov 27, 2003 14:11:56 GMT
U never doubted us once did u (naq)
Told ya ;D
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